View full sizeA poster for missing person Sarah Majoras is posted today on Main Street in New Hope, Pa., where the 39-year-old worked at a bar. She was last seen early Saturday walking home to Lambertville.AP Photo

About 140 to 160
people showed up this morning at the Lambertville CVS to help look for Sarah Majoras,
39, after a longtime friend formed the Facebook page "Find Sarah
Majoras." Page creator Joe Ujj said he wanted the page to dispel rumors circulating about the search and to enlist the help of members
of the community.

“She’s
gone to battle for many of us,” said Ujj, a musician from New Hope, Pa., who has known Majoras for the last 15 years. “I think that’s why so many of us want to do what we
can.”

The crowd met with
police so as not to interfere with investigations, Ujj said, then broke
into groups of 10 to start searching different areas of Lambertville. They reported
back to a command center set up at the Rago Arts and AuctionCenter on North Main Street, he said.

“She’s known and loved
by hundreds of people here,” he said. “I just wanted to make sure that we had a way
to check off where has been searched.”

Majoras was last seen
about 2 a.m.
crossing the toll-free bridge over the Delaware River that linksNew Hope and Lambertville after leaving John &
Peter's Bar in New Hope, Pa., where she worked as a bartender, authorities said.

Cameras on the bridge captured Majoras getting off the bridge and
entering Lambertville, where the Delaware and Raritan Canal cuts through the city, said Prosecutor Anthony Kearns III. He said
investigators planned to process different information collected tonight to try
to pinpoint where Majoras may be.

“We have our work cut out
for us,” he said. “It’s really just pieces of a puzzle that may not even be
pieces to this puzzle.”

One
possible piece of the puzzle is a pair of eyeglasses found by authorities today near the canal; it was unclear tonight if they
belong to the local bartender.

View full sizeA diver prepares today to enter the Delaware and Raritan Canal during the search for Majoras.AP Photo

Divers searched the D&RCanal and the Delaware River today and Sunday and will likely
start again early Tuesday, said Detective
Edmund DeFilippis, of the county prosecutor's office. Authorities
haven't received any specific information that she fell into the water, but
several diving teams, including Lambertville Rescue Squad and Garden State
Underwater Recovery Unit have been searching the canal since Sunday, he said.

"We're leaving no
stone unturned," he said.

Majoras' disappearance
closely mirrors a missing person case in 2000. Guitarist David Anderson was
reportedly last seen on a Saturday morning on the same walkway between New Hope and Lambertville. He was later found dead in
the D&RCanal.

Another common thread
is Majoras’ boyfriend, Adam Baker. Anderson was reportedly on his way to see Baker, who
was his friend, the night he disappeared. Attempts today to reach Baker were not
successful.

Authorities are aware of the similarities but
say that foul play is not suspected in Majoras' disappearance.

“We remain
open-minded,” Kearns said. “But there doesn’t appear to be any
evidence of foul play.”

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INFORMATION SOUGHT

Authorities ask anyone with information on the whereabouts of Sarah Majoras to contact the Lambertville Police Department at 609-397-3132.